Family Subtree Diagram : .Nancy Warren (1796)
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Other
Which william is correct here? Are they the same? In that case, which parents are correct? Or which William does Agnes belong to as wife?
Marriage (thirteen children)
(a child)
Marriage (three children)
Marriage (four children)
(a child)
Marriage (two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
Marriage (a child)
(a child)
(four children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
(a child)
(three children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
Marriage (a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
Marriage (five children)
Marriage (four children)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
Marriage (four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
Marriage (a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(ten children)
(a child)
(eight children)
(three children)
(a child)
(three children)
(three children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(five children)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(eight children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(three children)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(two children)
(nine children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(fifteen children)
(six children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(three children)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(four children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(seven children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(five children)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(six children)
(three children)
(three children)
(three children)
(three children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(ten children)
(nine children)
(a child)
(six children)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(two children)
(six children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(five children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(three children)
(seven children)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(two children)
(three children)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(eight children)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(three children)
(five children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(nine children)
(a child)
(two children)
(five children)
(a child)
(eight children)
(six children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(five children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
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(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
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(a child)
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(a child)
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(a child)
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(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(six children)
(five children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(five children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
Marriage (four children)
(three children)
(a child)
Marriage (three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(six children)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(three children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(four children)
(three children)
(three children)
(three children)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
1796
Nancy
Warren
1761 - 1842
William
Warren
80
80
Note:
1. (Source manuscript "Into and Out of - Old Kentucky" by William T. Smith.)
2. Src: 1790 Census SC:
Ninety Six District, Greenville County, William Warren 1-2-4-0-0
1 Male >16, 2 Males <16, 4 Females
3. Hardin Warren, Sr. not listed in 1790 Census, possibly born after 1790?
4. Listed on 1800 Kentucky Tax List.
1761 - 1850
Rhoda
Forrester
89
89
DECLARATION OF RHODA WARREN. WIDOW OF WILLIAM WARREN
State of Kentucky, Green County.
On this 14th day of January 1846 personally appeared before the undersigned, a Justice of the Peace in for the County aforesaid, Rhoda who being duly sworn according to law doth on her oath make the following Declaration in order to obtain the benefits of the Service Act of Congress Providing pensions for the widows of Revolutionary Soldiers. That she is now about eighty four or five years of age. That she was born as she verily believes about the year 1760-61. She had no record of her age however and has to rely upon her memory of past events to ascertain her age. That she was married to William Warren (who is now dead) in the County of Greenville in the State of South Carolina in the 14th year of her age to the best of her recollection. That her eldest child was born about 18 months after her marriage. Th at by said William Warren she had 13 children the youngest of' whom is now near about 40 years of age. That she removed with said husband William Warren to the County of Green and the state of Kentucky in the year 1796 according to the best of her recollection & there lived with the said William Warren as his wife until the 10th day of May 1842 upon which day the said William Warren departed this life in the said County of Green. That she has never intermarried since that time but sti ll continues the widow of the said William Warren Decd. She states that her said husband was a Revolutionary Soldier & performed service as such in that war but the particular dates of said service or length of said service or where rendered she is not now prepared to give an accurate account or a minute detail of. She states that this will however more fully appear by reference to the Declaration and proof filed by her said husband William Warren in the War Department at Washington City. Giving a full account of his said service which Declaration & proof referred to as a part of this petition.
She states that her husband said William Warren some years before his death, about the year 1833 or 4 made his application to the War Department for a Pension & was for some time inquiring his claim for it. That about the year 1839 the said Warren employed the Hon. Willis Green then a member of Congress to prosecute said claim & who did succeed in obtaining a certificate of Pension for said Warren, but that said Warren departed this life before said Green ever delivered the certificates over to him the said Warren. That said William Warren died on the 10th of May 1842 & that said Green obtained said certificate on the 15th of July of the proceeding year (1841). That said Green never delivered over to her the said Certificate until some time in the year 1845. Why it was that said Green failed to deliver over said Certificate sooner she is (illegible word) but supposes it (illegible word) to the (illegible word) of his (illegible word) in Congress and elsewhere.
She states that said William Warren her husband now deceased is the same identical person named in the certificate granted him of the above date. That he departed this life at the date above spoken of & without ever having drawn any thing for his services. That she has never since the death of said William drawn anything for the service of her said husband. That she has made application to the Pension agency at Washington for the purpose of drawing the arrears of pension due her said husband & refers to his application as part of this petition. And this said petition she files for the purpose of obtaining her own pension in right of the services of her deceased husband and placing herself upon a pension for life. She hereby relinquishes every claim whatever to a pension except the present and arrears due her said husband. She states that she is unable from age and bodily infirmity to attend Court for the purpose of making her said declaration in Court. Sworn to and subscribed by the said Rhoda Warren who is personally known to me before me this day and year above written.
Signed:
Rhoda (X) Warren
F. G. Graham, J. P.
State of Kentucky, Green County.
This day personally came James Warren a citizen of Green County, KY & made oath before me that he was personally acquainted with Rhoda Warren, the present widow of William Warren, deceased, and was also acquainted with said William Warren long before & since this said marriage & that said Rhoda & said deceased William was married in Greenville County, South Carolina he thinks about the year 1774 or about that to the best of his recollection & that they lived together as man and wife until said William departed this life in Green County KY some years ago leaving said Rhoda his widow who is still living in Green Co. That he lived within 2 miles from said Rhoda & William at the time of the wedding though he was not at their marriage. Subscribed & sworn before me on this 5th March 1846.
Signed:
James (X) Warren
F. G. Graham, J. P.
--------------------
NOTE: After several months Rhoda provided more information and again tried to claim her late husband's pension.
State of Kentucky, Green County.
Declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the 3rd Section of the Act of Congress of the 4th July 1836. On this 29th day of September 1846 personally appeared before the undersigned, a Justice of the Peace for & of the Court of the County foresaid. Rhoda Warren, a resident of the said county of Green & State aforesaid aged 85 years who being first duly sworn according to Law doth on her Oath make the following Declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the Provisions made by the act of congress passed July 4, 1836. That she is the widow of William Warren, who is now dead, who was a private in the Revolution War. That she is now about 85 years of age. That she was born from the best information she can get about the year 1760- 61 in the County of (Blank) in the State of South Carolina. That she was married to the said William Warren in the summer of the year 1774 at about the age of 14 years in the county of Greenville in the State of Carolina & by said William Warren she had thirteen children the issue of their marriage. That her Eldest Child was born about eighteen months after her marriage a Daughter who is now about 69 years old and the youngest one of her children is now about 39 or 40 years of age. The names of her children above mentioned, the issue of her marriage with said William Warren are as follows beginning with the Eldest viz.: Polly, Hugh, Elizabeth, Sally, Hardin, Andrew, Fredrick, William, Nancy, Rhoda, John, Dodson, and Silas Warren. She was married to said Warren by a Baptist minister by the name of Webb by what was called Publication of Banns in the Church. She has made Enquiry & search for it but has been unable to find it & she supposes that no record was made of it or if it was she supposed it may have been destroyed from the early period of her said marriage & the loose manner of keeping records & the difficulty of preserving them in the Revolution. She thinks it uncertain whether she can procure a copy of said record if any was even ever made of her said marriage. She has no record of the date. That is of the particular month in which she was married nor any record of her age but has to rely upon her memory of past events to determine them.
She did keep or attempt to keep a record of the ages of her children but she cannot now find that, it is either lost or destroyed. She states that from her great age she is unable to give a detail of the services minutely and particularly of her said husband. Of the particular time he entered the Service of his Country or when he left it or how many Engagements he was in or the particular names of all the officers in command of the troops in which her husband served. She states that her husband said William Warren was in the Service of his Country & was out on duty often after the marriage with said William to her. She is not enabled to state the particular time he first entered the service. She states however that said William Warren to the best of her (illegible word) & recollection first entered the service in the County of Greenville, South Carolina. That said Warren had been & was engaged in his Country's Service at the time of her marriage with him. He (illegible word) and with her but a short time after her marriage before he said Warren was called to go in the army towards Charleston but she cannot recollect the Captain or any other officers names. She recollects however that General Green after this took command as she was informed & that said William Warren was out in Service under said Green. She states that her said husband William applied for a Pension for said service & filed his proof Declaration in the Pension office at Washington City and that on the 15th day of July 1841 he said Warren had granted to him a certificate for his Pension at the rate of $66.66 ct per annum. She states that said William Warren died in the said County of Green and State of Kentucky on the 10th day of May 1842 leaving her the said Rhoda his widow, That she never intermarried since the death of said William Warren but still continues his widow. She states that from her great age and bodily infirmity she is unable to attend Court for the purpose of making this declaration in Court. She refers to the proof declaration as well as her former proof in this Court of said William Warren now on file in the Pension office at Washington City for a full history of his service in the Revolution. She states that she is the identical person who was the wife of the same William Warren to whom a certificate of Pension was provided as above stated. I further certify that said Rhoda Warren is a person of undoubted veracity & her said statement entitled to full credit & belief.
Signed: Rhoda (X) Warren, F. G. Graham
1776
Polly
Warren
1775
Joseph
Pelce
1805
Rhoda
Pelce
1778
William
Warren
1764
Hugh
Warren
1785
Sally
Warrren
1787
Elizabeth
Warren
1788
Hardin
Warren
1793 - 1850
Frederick
Warren
57
57
Voice call from Stephen Warren, descendant of Frederick Warren
states that Frederick Warren was listed as "Ben" on the death
certificate of son Jacob Warren.
Place of Birth was considered Boyle county, according to Marriage
Listing of Frederick's son, Dotson Warren and wife Parthena Skaggs.
This was written in the 1860's, at which time Boyle county was in
existence. However, when Frederick was born, this would have
been Lincoln County or Mercer County, as Boyle County was created
in 1842.
I find a Frederick Warren in the 1830 Greene County, Indiana census.
The info from the census indicates that this may be our Frederick.
1 white male between 30 and 40. Frederick's age was 37 (born 1793)
We would then know that his wife was younger, between 20 and 30.
Also listed is at least 6 others in his family, most likely his
children.
Either from restlessness or from a burning pioneer spirit, some of the Warrens decided to move on to Indiana in the
1820's, (Indiana became a state in 1816). The names of the heads of the families that moved include *Hardin, Fredrick,
and William, who were all sons of William. The Johnsons and Pelts who became allied by marriage accompanied
these Warrens on their trek. The county to which they moved was also named Greene County. It was heavily forested
and mountainous terrain, similar to the land they-farmed back in Kentucky. Hardin owned some 40 acres and Fredrick,
his brother owned 80 acres.
DEED OF FREDRICK AND SARAH WARREN TO JOHN PELTS
Be it remembered than on the 22nd day of March 1834 that John Pelts filed the following deed to be made a matter of record
which is in the words and figures following to wit: This indenture made this twenty second day of March in the year of our
Lord on thousand eight hundred and thierty four between Fredrick Warren and Sarah Warren his wife of the County of Green
and State of Indiana of the one part and John Pelts of the County and State aforesaid of the other. Witnesseth tthat the said
Fredrick Warren and Sarah Warren his wife for and in consideration of the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars to them in
hand paid the receipt wherof is hereby acknowledge have granted bargained and sold and by this presents do grant
bargained and sell to the said John Pelts a certain piece of parcel of land in the said county of Greene it being the East Half
of the North West Quarter of Section No. Twenty seven in Township seven North of Range No. Four West containing Eighty
Acres with the appurtenances there unto belonging or in any wise appertaining to have and to hold. The said tract of land
under the incumberance of a certain mortgage on the said tract of land under the incumbeerance of a certain mortgage on the
said tract of land given by me saidd Fredrick Warren to Carpus Shaw School Commissioneer in and for the said County of
Green and his successor in office dated May the 25th 1833 to secure the payment of the sum of thirty three dollars to be
paid in one year form said 25 day of May with the appurtenances there unto belonging to him the said John Pelts his heirs
and assigns to his and their only proper use and benefit and behoof forever; and they the said Fredrick Warren and Sarah
his wife to and with the said John Pelts his heirs and assigns do convenant and agree that they will and their therein shall
(except the incumbrance of the above named mortgage) Warrant and Defend the said tract of land of 80 acres against the
claim of all manner of persons unknown. In witness wherof the said Fredrick Warren and Sarah his wife have hereunto
set their hand seals this 22 day of March, 1834 as above written.
Signed Sealed and delivered his
in presence of us Fredrick X Warren
mark
Elisha P. Cushman her
Esther Cushman Sarah X Warren
mark
State of Indiana, Greene County. On this 22 day of March 1834 personally appeared before me the undersigned Recorder in
and for said County the above mentioned Fredrick Warren who acknowledged the forgoing deed to be executed by him and
his free voluntary act. An also afterwards on the same day came Sarah wife of Fredrick who being by me examined
separated and apart from her husband and duly informed of the contents of said deed, acknowledged she executed the same
freely and voluntarily and without the coercion or comulsion of her said husband. Given under my hand and seal this the
said 22nd of March 1834
Thomas Warnick Recorder
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ingramrelated&id=I015411
1795
Andrew
Warren
1800
Rhoda
Warren
1805
John
Warren
1806
Dodson
Warren
1807
Silas
Warren
1723 - 1800
Hugh
Warren
77
77
http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=skaggsl&id=I00506
Note:
1. [Brøderbund Family Archive #310, Ed. 1, Census Index: Colonial America, 1607-1789, Date of Import: Sep 13, 1996, Internal Ref. #1.310.1.1835.100]
Individual: Warren, Hugh
County/State: Ninety-six Dist., SC
Year: 1779
2. Listed as a South Carolina Patriot in the American Revolution. "He served on horseback from 1 February 1783 to 15 July 1783 under Capt. Major Parson and Col. Roebuck." (Source manuscript "Into and Out of - Old Kentucky" by William T. Smith.)
3. Died at age 69 after Feb 5, 1794, because on that date he was a Jury Member in Greenville County, SC. (Source ibid.)
4. He sold property to Thomas Warren February 16, 1787 in District Ninety Six, Craven County, SC. The land was located on the west side of the Pacolet River. In 1791 Thomas Warren sold this land to Isaac Young. (Source ibid.)
5. Hugh bought property from John Collins March 18, 1787 in 96 District, Spartanburg County, SC. He paid 100 pounds for 205 acres located on both sides of the South Tygar River.
6. Hugh Warren: File No. 597; Bk 23, p. 123
100 Acres on both sides of Buck Creek of Packlet......23 Jan 1773.....Jo Martin.
Src: North Carolina Land Grants in South Carolina....Holcomb...Cat No. SCR 929.3756
Src: S.C. Land Memorials, Vol XII, p. 517, gives year as 1773.
7. Listed in 1790 Census as follows:
Ninety Six District, Greenville County, Hugh Warren 1-0-2-0-0
1 Male >16, 2 Females over 16.
Src: 1790 Census SC
8. Who was 2nd Female?
9. Listed on 1800 Kentucky Tax List.[HughAncestors.ftw]
Research to date, has proved our ancestry back to Virginia. What hasn't been proven, is where Hugh Warren Senior, and wife Sarah were born.
Apparently a genealogical search on Capt. William Warren of this family, traces his lineage through a William Warren (immigrant) in 1653 in New Towne Hundred in Maryland. RE: Wilma Warren Raysin of Paragould, Arkansas.
I have not substantiated any of the data for Matthew, John, or Levi, as it was provided by another researcher. At this point, I can neither prove it true, or false. The fact From Hugh Senior in the Family group referenced by Wilma Warren Raysin and passed along by Larry A. Warren and noted December 10th, 1997
Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire
page 517
Samuel,Spurwink, fisherman, 25 in 1653, 34 in 1664, took O. A. and sub. to Mass. in 1658. He m. Mary Boaden(1), ±43 in 1679, who m. 2d Walter Adams(20). She was frequenting the company of John Mayer in a suspicious manner in 1665. He had a gr. from Mr. Jocelyn in 1668 and 50 a. at Spurwink from Mr. Scottow in 1675. Selectman 1671, 1673, 1674, 1676; gr.j. 1673, 1674; j. 1664, 1666, 1672, 1673. Lists 111, 232, 236, 237ac, 239ab. Adm. 30 June 1676 to wid. Mary. The inv. showed 120 a. of land, 10 a. of `in-land' and 10 a. of marsh. Kn. ch: Samuel, in ct. in 1674 for sailing out of Cape Porpus harbor on the Lord's day, m. Grace (Briar 4) Chilson bef. 1677 when they deeded her 1st husb.'s farm to Hugh Warren of Boston. Selectman 1681. Lists 237ac. No kn. ch. Josiah. Susanna, b. ab. 1660, lived with (1) in her youth, m. 1st Edward Bennett(4), m. 2d Peter King. Tobias, b. ab. 1665. Mary `Hocman,' b. in Black Point, w. of Thomas Hoar or Whove and a prisoner in Canada (see Hocman), may have been a dan. or a gr. dau. of (5).
1720 - 1810
Sarah
Pope
90
90
1749
James
Warren
1764
Hugh
Warren
1682 - 1749
Thomas
Warren
67
67
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
I recently came across a will of Thomas Warren who died April 13, 1749. His will was proved on December 4, 1750 in Spotsylvania County, Virginia.
In this will he lists his wife Mary, and his sons Hackley and Lancelot. He also names his daughters Rachel Hasken and Roxanna More.
Does anyone have any information on this family? I have a Hackley Warren whose daughter Mary Agnes Warren born 1753 married James Sams. Mary and James Sams named their sons Hackley and Lancelot and Warren. Sounds like the same family to me, but need proof. Can anyone help? Thanks, Kathy - MorganHolt@aol.com
Thomas was buried on the homeplace, Mattapon, St. George Parish, Spotsylvania County, Virginia.
Sworn into the Colonial Army 5 August, 1729.
Virginia County Records SPOTSYLVANIA COUNTY 1721-1800
WILLS
WILL BOOK B 1749-1759
page 10
WARREN, THOMAS, Planter, Spotsylvania Co., d. Apr. 13, 1749, p. Dec. 4, 1750. Wit. Robert Huddlestone, Abram Rogers, Barbara Rogers. Ex. wife, Mary and son, Hackley Warren. Leg. son, Hackley Warren, 95 acres of land which I formerly gave to my daughter Rachel Hasken. Daughter, Elizabeth Brook; daughter Mary Buford; daughter, Roxanna More; son, Lancelot Warren. To my wife, Mary Warren, all the rest of my estate during her life. (Page 56)
WARING , Benjamin 1716 Colony, SC Petitioner No Twp. Listed
WARING , Benjamin 1717 Colony, SC Petitioner No Twp Listed
WARING , John 1772 Colony, SC Resident No Twp Listed
WARING , Lott 1779 Colony, SC Resident Old 96th DISTRICT
WARING , Thomas 1717 Colony, SC Petitioner No Twp Listed
WARING , William 1779 Colony, SC Resident Old 96th DISTRICT
WARING THOMAS , 1716 Colony, SC Petitioner No Twp. Listed
1684 - 1749
Mary
Elizabeth
Hackley
65
65
1722
William
Warren
1719
Rosanna
Warren
Lancelot
Warren
1637 - 1691
John
R.
Warren
54
54
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
24 July 1635. Persons to be transported (from London) to Virginia by
the Assurance of London, Mr. Isack Bromwell, after examination by the
Minister of Gravesend:
Robert Brian 27; Maudlin Jones 60; Ann Shawe 32; John Duncomb 46; Sith
Haieward 30; Richard Hamdy (or Hamey) 38; William Holland 35; Henry
Snowe 26; Marie Southwood 22; Francis Rowlson 29; Jane Sowthern 19;
Margerie Baker 39; Sara Rayne 18; Andrew Underwood 22; Phillipp Johns
; Henrie Marshall 35; Henry Heiden 30; Elizabeth Sherlocke 29; Thomas
Hurlock 40; Samuel Handy 25; John Gater 36; Joan Gater 23; William Lee
36; Josua Titloe 19; John Middleton 23; Robert Haiward 22; Samuel
Powell 19; Richard Glover 24; Thomas Pagitt 41; Mathew Holmes 21;
Elias Harrington 22; Richard Smith 35; Thomas Robinson 24; Evan Ap
Evan 19;
John Browne 21; Robert Frith 23; Thomas Wilkinson 23; Dennis Hoggin
24; John Friccar 25; Richard Ridges 19; Edward Davies 27; Theodorus
Bakewell 21; John Dermot 21; John Morgan 27; Thomas Baycock 46;
Richard Rogers 48; Richard Lockley 51; John Jakes 20; Thomas More 19;
John Baker 22; Nehemiah Cason 21; Robert Mayes 28; Richard Barnes 38;
John Buttler 50; William Rebbell 19; Robert Wyon 22; Mathew Dixon 18;
John Wheeler 23; John North 24; Moutford Newman 27; Robert Steere 17;
William Lake 35; Humfrey Wilkins 19; Antony Stilgo 21; Thomas Deacon
19; Robert Rigglie 19; Benjamin Pillard 18; Robert Davies 28; John
Smith 20; Walter Merridith 33; Thomas Phillips 24; James Kingswill (or
Kingsmill) 18; John Bowton 20; Walter Chapman 44; James Arnold 37;
Richard Leake 18; Thomas Edwynn 13; Handgate Baker 22; John Abrock 20;
Thomas Hall 15; James Edwin 18; Edward Commins 28; John Gater 15;
Nicolas Gibson 22; John Roberts 46; George Mosely 20; James Ravish 20;
John Hales 21; Warram Tuck 20; John Jones 30; William Culture 19;
Robert Silby 19; Richard Bruster 26; John Swanley 21; William Charles
21; Anthony Lee 21; William Williams 28; Henry George 19; John Billins
21; William Write 18; Robert Lovett 20; Job Jefferie 19; Henrie Haler
22; Richard Symonds 33; James Sparks 57; Richard Kirbie 32; James
Hingle 40; Thomas Saunderson 24; William Spicer 20; William Thomas 19;
Henry Madin 30; Edward Ednall 21; Thomas Jefferies 22; Nicolas Jackson
22; Thomas Spratt 23; Thomas Leonard 18; Thomas Beson 24; Christopher
Dixon 24; Isack Kemp 23; Jeremie Slie 19; John O'Mullin 18; Antony
Procter 16; Robert Handley 19; John Aymies 18; John Tayler 21; William
Roffin 18; Richard Halsey 13; Antony Otland 18; Robert Oldrick 18;
William Hall 21; JOHN COPELAND 19 ; John Goad 18; John Pooly 17;
Francis Gayer 18; Thomas Craven 17; Richard Lucas 16; George Cullidge
18; Lawrence Barker 26; John Bowes 20; John Woodbridge 32; John
Johnson 20; John Chappell 38; George Whittaker 32; Richard Liversidge
24; Henrie Wood 20; Robert Max 21; John Warren 18; Thomas Turner 18;
John Garland
19; John Humfrey 23; Isack Ambrose 18; William Huncote 35; Thomas
Williams 19; Thomas Foxcrofte 19; Thomas Hobbs 22; Charles Collohon
19; Henry Donn 23; Roger Quintin 21; William Small 18; William Coleman
16; Antony Androwe 21; John Richardson 18; William Claddin 17; Thomas
Gudderidge 17; Roger Burley 17; Thomas Bard 16; Henry Butler 14; John
Budd 15; John Marshall 35; William Read 30; Edward Mitchell 18; Robert
Drewrie 16; Richard Wells 17; John Cotes 17; John Stubber 17; Henry
Lee 18; Richard Ball 17; John Cooke 17; Thomas Syer 14; John Partridge
18; John Johnson 24; Isbell Davies 22; Isabell Hakesby 23; Joan
Vallins 17;
Marie Chambney 28; Elizabeth Allcott 20; Francis Bakewell 30;
Elizabeth Payne 21; Elizabeth Hughson 22; Marie Averie 22; Sara Alport
25; Marie Lee 22; Elizabeth Bateman 23; Thomazin Markcom 26; Ann
Goldwell 17; Ann Griffinn 26; James Brookes 28 and his wife Alice
Brookes 18; Dorcas Mercer 30; Ellin Davies 23; Alice Harris 21; Eedie
Holloway 22; Sara Coggin 20; Elizabeth Baker 20; Dorothie Davies 17;
Elizabeth Raynard 20; Marie Olliver 21; Alice Riall 18; Rabecca
Parmeton 19; Marie Middleton 17; Katherine Fulder 17; Elizabeth Dicks
18; Sara Greene 20; Margaret Rickord 20; Winnifredd Congrave 22;
Mathew Plant 23; John More 28; Elizabeth Powell 17; Marie Shorter 26;
Marie Lee 14 weeks; Mathew Clatworthy 25. (PRO:E157/20).
1636 - 1706
Rachel
Sargent
70
70
1604 - 1677
Thomas
Warren
73
73
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Thomas Warren secured passage to Virginia by becoming an indentured servant of the Greenleafes, as he is listed as such on one of the logs.
Virginia Land Patent records of 1635, show that Thomas and Susan Warren, "RELICT OF ROBERT GREENLEAFE" were deeded 300 acres of land between them.
1596 - 1636
Susan
Greenleaf
40
40
1563 - 1609
Edward
Warren
46
46
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Knight of Poynton, Baron of Stockport, High Sheriff of Cheshire, England.
Knighted in 1599, while serving in the Irish Wars.
1575
Susan
Bothe
1553 - 1587
John
Warren
34
34
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
High Sheriff of Cheshire, England in 1577.
Will dated October 1587.
Buried at Stockport 14 December 1587.
1530 - 1617
Margaret
Molineaux
87
87
D. 1568
Richard
Molineaux
(Burke's Peerage Barontage and Knightage 1970 edition)
He was Knighted at the coronation of Queen Mary, and served the office of Sheriff of Lancashire 1556.
Eleanor
Ratcliffe
Alexander
Ratcliffe
1498 - 1558
Edward
Warren
60
60
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Edward was knighted at Leith, near Edinburgh, 11 May 1558.
1500 - 1584
Dorothy
Booth
84
84
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Dorothy's will was dated 23 May 1584.
Children not mentioned in will:
It did not mention the two Edward Warren's, who died young.
It did not mention Ellen, Joan, Ethelred, Anne, who died young.
1450 - 1519
William
Bothe
69
69
Ellen
Montgomery
1450
Margaret
Asheton
1485
George
Bothe
1481 - 1530
Laurence
Warren
49
49
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Will made 18 November 1529.
Margaret
Legh
1465 - 1517
John
Warren
52
52
1462
Eleanor
Gerard
1431 - 1490
Thomas
Gerard
58
58
Sir Thomas Gerard, Knt., of Kingsley & Bryn, b. 15 July 1431, ward of Thomas Danyell 1449, proof of age 2 Aug 1452, pension from Edward IV, d. 27 Mar 1490; m. c 1440 as child (1) Douce, dau. of Sir Thomas Ashton; m. (2) Cecily, dau. of Sir Robert Foulshurst, made vow of chastity after death of husband, d. 24 Mar 1502. [Ancestral Roots]
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 1131
Text: abt 1430
Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 233b-38
1434
Douce
de
Ashton
1433 - 1474
Laurence
Warren
41
41
1414 - 1474
John
Warren
60
60
1414
Isabel
Stanley
1394 - 1443
Laurence
Warren
49
49
1389
Margery
Bulkeley
1368 - 1391
Richard
Bulkeley
23
23
1369 - 1459
Margery
Venables
90
90
1330 - 1383
Hugh
de
Venables
53
53
1335 - 1398
Margery
de
Cotton
63
63
1373 - 1413
Nicholas
Warren
40
40
1375 - 1417
Agnes
De
Wynnington
42
42
1345 - 1422
Richard
De
Wynnington
77
77
Sources:
1. Author: Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr.
Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain Americian Colonists, 7th Edition
Publication: Name: Genealogical Publishing Company; Location: Baltimore; Date: 1992;
Note:
Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain Americian Colonists, 7th Edition (Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1992).
Page: 231-33
Text: QUAY 3
2. Title: Six, Wierschke Families & More.ged
Note:
Six, Wierschke Families & More.ged, Source Medium: Other
.
Text: Date of Import: Jan 13, 2009
1354
Emma
Mainwaring
1343 - 1386
John
Warren
43
43
1345 - 1418
Margaret
Stafford
73
73
1321 - 1369
Edward
Warren
48
48
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
3rd, but only surviving son of Edward De Warren.
1324
Cecily
Eton
1300 - 1350
Nicholas
De
Eton
50
50
1289 - 1339
Joan
Stockport
50
50
1281
Edward
Warren
Matild
Nerford
1241
John
De
Warren
Joan
De
Port
1201
John
De
Warren
Alice
De
Townsand
Roger
De
Townsand
1160
William
De
Warren
Isabelle
De
Hayden
William
De
Hayden
Aldalia
De
Mowbray
1083 - 1138
William
De
Warren
55
55
# Note:
WILLIAM (DE WARENNE) II, EARL OF SURREY, 1st son and heir by 1st wife, usually styled EARL DE WARENNE. In 1090 he fought in Normandy against Robert de Belléme (afterwards 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury), who was supported by Duke Robert. Shortly after 1093 he sought unsuccessfully to marry Maud, daughter of Malcolm III, King of Scotland. He was with Henry I at Windsor on 3 September 1101, but later in that autumn he went with Duke Robert to Normandy and supported him against the King, who confiscated his inheritance in England; however, in 1103 the Duke induced Henry to restore his English Earldom. In 1106 he commanded a division of the royal army at the battle of Tinchebrai. In 1109 he was at a Great Council at Nottingharn; and in 1110 he was a surety for the performance of the treaty with the Count of Flanders. In 1111 he was one of the nobles sitting in judgement in Normandy. He commanded a division of the royal army at the battle of Brémule in 1119 (l). In 1131 he attended the Council at Northampton. He was present at the death of Henry I on 1 December 1135 at Lyons-la-Foret; after which the councillors put him in charge of the district of Rouen and the pays de Caux. Later he went to England, and he was at Westminster with Stephen at Easter 1136. He was probably still living in June 1137. He was a benefactor, or confirmed previous benefactions, to the abbeys of St. Evroul and St. Amand (Rouen), and the priories of Lewes, Castle Acre, Wymondham, Longueville and Bellencombre. Henry I had proposed to marry William to one of his illegitimate daughters, but on Archbishop Anselm's objection this match was abandoned on the ground of affinity. William eventually married Isabel (or Elizabeth), widow of Robert (DE BEAUMONT), COUNT OF MEULAN and 1st EARL OF LEICESTER (died 5 June 1118) (c), daughter of Hugh DE CRÉPI (styled "the Great"), COUNT OF VERMANDOIS (younger son of HENRY I, KING OF FRANCE), by Adelaide, daughter and heir of Herbert, COUNT OF VERMANDOIS and VALOIS. He died probably 11 May 1138 and was buried at his father's feet in the chapter-house at Lewes. Isabel survived him and with the consent of her son the 3rd Earl gave the church of Dorking to Lewes priory (g). She died probably before July 1147 (h). [Complete Peerage XII/1:495-6
Note: According to Ancestral Roots, Isabel preceeded William in death in 13 Feb 1130/31--not July 1147.
# Note: (l) He had encouraged Henry to fight when William (de Tancarville) the Chamberlain urged him to retreat. His alleged speech to the King before the battle is given in "Chron. Men de Hida", pp. 316-7.
# Note: (c) According to Henry of Huntingdon [their daughter Ada's husband], the death of Isabel's 1st husband was hastened by an (unnamed) Earl carrying her off, by force or fraud. The truth of this is open to question.
# Note:
(g) He left 3 sons: William - 3rd Earl, Ralph, and Rainald, ancestor of the Warennes of Wormegay; and 2 daughters: (1) Gundred, who m. 1st Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick; 2ndly, (as his 2nd wife), William de Lancaster; (2) Ada, who m. Henry, Earl of Huntingdon, s. of David I, King of Scotland, by whom she was mother of Malcolm IV and William the Lion, Kings of Scotland.
# Note: (h) Before her son William, 3rd Earl, went on crusade in June 1147.
# Note:
# Note: --------------------------------------------------------------------------
This nobleman, William de Warrenne (Earl of Warrenne), 2nd Earl of Surrey, joined Robert de Belesmé, Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury, in favour of Robert Curthose against Henry I, and in consequence forfeited his English earldom and estates, but those were subsequently restored to him and he was ever afterwards a good and faithful subject to King Henry. His lordship m. Isabel, dau. of Hugh the Great, Earl of Vermandois, and widow of Robert, Earl of Mellent, by whom he had issue, William, Reginald, Ralph, Gundred, and Adeline. The earl d. 11 May, 1138, and was s. by his eldest son, William de Warrenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 569, Warren, Earls of Surrey]
Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 155-1
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 2944
Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: XII/1:495-6
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 112
1055 - 1088
William
de
Warren
33
33
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Seigneur De Varennes, Near Dieppe; Earl Of Surrey.
William de Warenne, Count, Earl of Surrey 1st
Acceded: 16 APR 1088
Interred: Chapter House, Lewes, Sussex
Notes:
Ancestry shown differs from that shown by Cokayne in "The Complete
Peerage", and follows "Aspects of Robert of Torigny's genealogies
revisted"; "Nottingham Medieval Studies,xxxvii,1993,pp.21-27; as
cited by A.B.Wilson and S.Baldwin
---
# Note:
WILLIAM DE WARENNE was 1st son of Rodulf II by Emma. At some time in or after 1054 Duke William gave him the castle of Mortemer, which had been forfeited by his kinsman, Roger de Mortimer, after the Battle of Mortemer in February of that year. Probably at the same time he acquired lands at Bellencombre, the castle of which became the caput of the Warenne barony in Normandy. In 1066 he was one of the Norman barons summoned by the Duke to a Council on hearing that Harold had been crowned King after the death of the Confessor. He took part in the invasion of England and was present at the Battle of Hastings. He was rewarded with lands in 13 counties (j), including most of the rape of Lewes in Sussex, the manor of Conisborough, co. York, and Castle Acre and a number of holdings in Norfolk. In 1067 he was one of the Norman nobles whom the Conqueror left in England to support his vice-regents, William FitzOsbern and the Bishop of Bayeux. In 1075 he was one of the two chief justiciars who were in charge of England when the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk rebelled and who summoned them to the King's court, and on their refusal crushed the rebellion (b). About 1083-85 he was fighting for the King in Maine (c). In the spring of 1088 he supported William II against the rebels led by the Bishop of Bayeux and the Count of Mortain, and to secure his loyalty he was created, shortly after Easter (16 April) 1088, EARL OF SURREY (e), his immediate successors being styled more usually EARLS DE WARENNE. He was mortally wounded at the siege of Pevensey before the end of May. He founded Lewes priory as a cell of Cluny abbey, about 1078-82. He married, 1stly, Gundred, sister of Gerbod the Fleming, EARL OF CHESTER, possibly daughter of Gerbod, hereditary advocate of the Abbey of St. Bertin at St. Omer. She died in child-birth, 27 May 1085, at Castle Acre, Norfolk, and was buried the chapter-house at Lewes. He married, 2ndly, [----], sister of Richard GUET (living 1098). He died 24 June 1088, apparently from the effect of his wound at Pevensey, at Lewes, and was buried there beside his wife. [Complete Peerage XII/1:493-5, XIV:604 (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
# Note:
# Note: (j) Bedford, Bucks, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Lincoln, Oxford, York, Berks, Essex, Hants, Norfolk, Suffolk, and Sussex.
# Note:
# Note: (b) William was one of those who occupied Norwich castle after its surrender.
# Note:
# Note: (c) He was one of the leaders of an unsuccessful attack on the castle of Ste Suzanne in Jan, year uncertain.
# Note:
(e) The creation has been ascribed to the Conqueror, but certainly in error. This was the only earldom created before the reign of Stephen of which the holder did not take his title from the county in which lay his chief territorial strength. However, it is likely that with the Earldom he was given lands at Reigate in Surrey.
# Note:
# Note: --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Note:
# Note: [From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]
# Note:
For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
# Note:
# Note: --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Note:
William Warenne was one of those followers of William of Normandy who made their fortunes by the conquest of England. The younger son of Rudulf of Varenne in Normandy, he distinguished himself in ducal service as a very young man in the early 1050s. After the ducal victory at Mortemer (1054) he received estates in upper Normandy, but it was only after the English invasion that he attained the front rank. He fought at Hastings and was rewarded with lands which by 1086 extended into thirteen counties, most notably strategically important estates in Sussex centered round Lewes. By the end of William I's reign he was one of the dozen largest individual landowners in England. He repaid his debt with vigorous loyalty in both England and France. In 1075 he played a leading role in suppressing the revolt of the earls of Hereford and Norfolk. After the Conqueror's death, Warenne supported William Rufus in 1087-88 against Robert Curthose and Odo of Bayeux. Rufus encouraged his service by creating him earl of Surrey in 1088. The same year Warenne was seriously wounded by an arrow in his leg at the siege of Pevensey and died at his foundation of Lewes Priory on 24 June 1088.
# Note:
Warenne's career was more than meteoric. A younger son of an obscure minor Norman nobleman, he had risen through conspicuous loyalty to his lord to become not only one of the richest men in one of the richest kingdoms of Europe but also the founder of a dynasty which, powerful, wealthy and influential, survived as earl of Surrey until 1347. Warenne's foundation at Lewes (1078/80) was the first Cluniac house in England, another sign of the Conquest's effect on establishing institutional as well as personal links across the Channel. Warenne's success depended on the traditional chivalric virtues of loyalty, bravery and prowess in arms. His life illustrates the stupendous prizes and the personal dangers on offer to those who joined the conquest of England. It was appropriate that Warenne's direct descendent, John De Warenne, Earl of Surrey (1231-1304), when challenged in 1278 by royal commissioners to produce title to his land, produced an old rusty sword declaring, 'Here, my Lord, is my warrant (warrantus: a pun which no doubt appealed to the somewhat intractable sense of honour of the time). My ancestors came with William the Bastard and won their lands with the sword, and by the sword I will hold them against all comers.' Earl John won his case. William of Warenne would have approved. [Who's Who in Early Medieval England, Christopher Tyerman, Shepheard-Walwyn, Ltd., London, 1996]
# Note:
# Note: ----------
# Note:
William de Warrenne, Earl of Warrenne, in Normandy, a near kinsman of William the Conqueror, came into England with that prince and, having distinguished himself at the battle of Hastings, obtained an immense portion of the public spoliation. He had large grants of land in several counties, amongst which were the Barony of Lewes, in Sussex, and the manors of Carletune and Benington, in Lincolnshire. So extensive indeed were those grants that his possessions resembled more the dominions of a sovereign prince than the estates of a subject. He enjoyed, too, in the highest degree, the confidence of the king, and was appointed joint justice-general with Richard de Benefactis for administering justice throughout the whole realm. While in that office, some great disturbers of the public peace having refused to appear before him and his colleague in obedience to citation, the Earl took up arms and defeated the rebels in a battle at Fagadune, when he is said, for the purpose of striking terror, to have cut off the right foot of each of his prisoners. Of those rebels, Ralph Wahir or Guarder, Earl of Norfolk, and Roger, Earl of Hereford, were the ringleaders. His lordship was likewise highly esteemed by King William Rufus, and was created by that monarch Earl of Surrey. He m. Gundred, dau. of the Conqueror*, and had issue, William, Reginald, Gundred-Edith, and another dau. who m. Ernise de Colungis.
# Note:
This potent noble built the castle of Holt and founded the priory at Lewes, in Sussex. He resided principally at the castle of Lewes, and had besides Castle-Acre, in Norfolk, and noble castles at Coningsburg and Sandal. He d. 24 June, 1088, and Dugdale gives to following curious account of his parting hour. "It is reported that this Earl William did violently detain certain lands from the monks of Ely, for which, being often admonished by the abbot, and not making restitution, died miserably. And, though his death happened very far off the isle of Ely, the same night he died, the abbot lying quietly in his bed and meditating on heavenly things, heard the soul of this earl, in its carriage away by the devil, cry out loudly and with a known and distinct voice, Lord have mercy on me; Lord have mercy on me. And, moreover, that the next day after, the abbot acquainted all the monks in chapter therewith. And likewise, that about four days after, there came a messenger to them from the wife of this earl with 100 shillings for the good of his soul, who told them that he died the very hour that the abbot had heard the outcry. But that neither the abbot nor any of the monks would receive it, not thinking it safe for them to take the money of a damned person. If this part of the story as to the abbot's hearing the noise be no truer than the last, viz., that his lady sent them 100 shillings, I shall deem it to be a mere fiction, in regard the lady was certainly dead about three years before." The earl was s. by his elder son, William de Warenne. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 568, Warren, Earls of Surrey]
# Note:
* At one time, it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William the Conqueror. This has since been disproved. For details, see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C. T. Clay, or "Études sur Quelques Points de l'Historie de Guillaume le Conquérant" by H. Prentout. [Brian Tompsett, Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, University of Hull, Hull, UK, "Electronic," royal01389]
# Note:
# Note: Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
# Note: Page: 158-1
# Note:
# Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
# Note: Page: XII/1:493-495
# Note:
# Note: Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999
# Note: Page: 111
# Note: Text: location only - no dates.
1020 - 1074
Rudolf
De
Warren
54
54
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
Acceded: 1074
---
# Note:
RODULF DE WARENNE, 1st son and heir, is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his father's lands near Rouen and in the pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death; he married Emma, whose parentage is unknown.
# Note:
# Note: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------
# Note:
# Note: [From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]
# Note:
For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
# Note:
# Note: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------
# Note: Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com, provided the
# Note: following additional information on Rodulf
# Note: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------
# Note:
# Note: Rodulf (Ralph) I de Warenne
# Note:
# Note: K.S.B. Keats-Rohan "Poppa of Bayeux and her Family":
# Note:
# Note: 1027-35: first occurrence of Ralph de Warenne in a charter for Saint-Amand [p22]
# Note:
# Note: c1050: grant of land in Vascoeuil by Ralph de Warenne and wife Beatrice; charter mentions Ralph's brother Godfrey and was attested by Gotmund miles abbatis. Dateable to c1050 by a reference to Roger de Beaumont as Vicomte of Rouen [p22]
# Note:
# Note: 1050's: well known charters of early 1050s by which Ralph de Warenne and his wife Beatrice were associated with the lands of Roger fitz Bishop Hugh of Coutances and his sons. [p23]
# Note:
Research note: K-R p22 contradicts CP (& Holloway & Wagner) by stating Rodulph/Ralph died before Beatrice. Beatrice is listed as living 1053 (CP XII/1:492 & ES III:698) & dead before 1059 (CP XII/1:492, K-R p22, Moriarty p184, Wagner p46]. K-R states a grant "made by widow Beatrice" to Preaux of land near Dozule, Eure was "dated during the time of William son of Count Robert, suggesting that William had not yet begun the series of military achievements that enabled him to be detached from his father in such references, i.e. before c1054-60". To do: check CP's source of the 1074 grant. Also is the term "widow" K-R's or stated in the grant of the land near Dozule?...
# Note:
# Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
# Note: Page: 112
# Note:
# Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
# Note: Page: XII/1:493
# Note:
# Note: Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com
# Note: Page: Todd A. Farmerie, 3 Dec 1996
# Note: Text: father of William de Warenne by Emma
# Note:
# Note: Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999
# Note: Page: 111
# Note: Text: location only - no dates
0998 - 1059
Rudolph
Warren
61
61
# Note:
RODULF (e) DE WARENNE derived his name from the hamlet of Varenne (dept. Seine-Inférieure) on the little river Varenne in Normandy. His parentage is unknown. He is said to have held land outside the walls of Rouen under Robert I, Duke of Normandy (died 1035), and the Cartulary of the abbey of the Holy Trinity on the Mont de Rouen proves that he held a considerable territory on both banks of the Seine upstream from Rouen. He also held land at Vascoeuil (dept. Eure), which he gave about 1053 to the abbey of St. Pierre de Préaux (b), and in the pays de Caux, north of Rouen, where he sold 4 churches with tithes to the Holy Trinity in 1059, and gave another church, also with tithes, in 1074. He married Beatrice, whose mother was almost certainly a sister of Gotmund Rufus DE VASCOEUIL, daughter of Tesselin, Vicomte of Rouen. She was living about 1053. [Complete Peerage XII/1:491-2, XIV:603, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
# Note:
(e) His christian name is Latinised both as Rodulfus and as Radulfus (Ralph), This confusion occurs in other families (eg. the founder of the "Tancarvilles") and is probably due to two somewhat similar names having been assimilated into one; eg. Ranulf (from Hrabenwulf) and Randolf (from Randwulf). Scribes were then likely to change Rodulfus when copying early charters.
# Note:
(b) Before May 1055 Rodulf sold to the monks land at Blosseville and Eauplet, on the right bank of the Seine, and Sotteville on the left bank. Subsequently he sold them all his rights in Blosseville, Mesnil-Esnard, Neuvillette, Lescure and Eauplet.
# Note:
# Note: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Note:
# Note: [From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]
# Note:
For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
# Note:
# Note: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Note: Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com, provided the
# Note: following additional information on Rodulf, in a post-em:
# Note: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Note:
# Note: Rodulf (Ralph) I de Warenne
# Note:
# Note: K.S.B. Keats-Rohan "Poppa of Bayeux and her Family":
# Note:
# Note: 1027-35: first occurrence of Ralph de Warenne in a charter for Saint-Amand [p22]
# Note:
# Note: c1050: grant of land in Vascoeuil by Ralph de Warenne and wife Beatrice; charter mentions Ralph's brother Godfrey and was attested by Gotmund miles abbatis. Dateable to c1050 by a reference to Roger de Beaumont as Vicomte of Rouen [p22]
# Note:
# Note: 1050's: well known charters of early 1050s by which Ralph de Warenne and his wife Beatrice were associated with the lands of Roger fitz Bishop Hugh of Coutances and his sons. [p23]
# Note:
Research note: K-R p22 contradicts CP (& Holloway & Wagner) by stating Rodulph/Ralph died before Beatrice. Beatrice is listed as living 1053 (CP XII/1:492 & ES III:698) & dead before 1059 (CP XII/1:492, K-R p22, Moriarty p184, Wagner p46]. K-R states a grant "made by widow Beatrice" to Preaux of land near Dozule, Eure was "dated during the time of William son of Count Robert, suggesting that William had not yet begun the series of military achievements that enabled him to be detached from his father in such references, i.e. before c1054-60". To do: check CP's source of the 1074 grant. Also is the term "widow" K-R's or stated in the grant of the land near Dozule?... Curt
# Note:
# Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
# Note: Page: XII/1:491-492
# Note: Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999
# Note: Page: 111
# Note: Text: location only - no dates
1004 - 1059
Beatrice
De
Vascoeuil
55
55
# Note: He [Rodulf de Warenne] married Beatrice, whose mother was almost certainly a sister of Gotmund Rufus DE VASCOEUIL, daughter of Tesselin, Vicomte of Rouen. She was living about 1053.
# Note:
# Note: -------------------
# Note:
# Note:
# Note: From: Todd A. Farmerie (taf2@po.cwru.edu)
# Note: Subject: Robert de Torigny and the family of Gunnor, Duchess of Normandy
# Note: Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
# Note: Date: 1996/12/03
# Note:
It appears to be through this family that the relationship of two more Norman barons come into play, but not exactly as Torigny presents it. He shows yet another niece marrying Ranulph de Warenne, and by him having William de Warenne and Roger de Mortimer. This is clearly untrue, because Roger appears to have been a generation older than William. The solution appears to be that Torigny (as he had done with the Montgomerys) compressed into one individual a father and son of the same name. Ranulph de Warenne (I) appears to have married Beatrice, sister of Richard, vicomte of Rouen, and thus sister-in-law of one of Gunnor's nieces (thus it would appear that this family actually does not descend from a relative of Gunnor's, but is genealogically linked to some of her descendants) and had sons: Roger (de Mortimer) and Ranulph de Warenne (II), who in turn was father of another Ranulf (III) and of William de Warenne.
# Note:
# Note: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
# Note: Page: XII/1:492
0968
Hugh
Of
Normandy
Gunmora
0970
Tesselin
Rouen
0985
Beatrice
De
Bolbec
Roger
De
Moulray
Hugh
De
Port
John
Stafford
1357 - 1413
John
Stanley
56
56
1364 - 1414
Isabel
Harrington
50
50
D. 1413
John
Stanley
Isabel
Lathom
William
De
Stanleigh
1330
Thomas
Lathom
Piers
Legh
~1556 - 1579
William
Bothe
23
23
1560
Elizabeth
Warburton
1521 - 1548
George
Bothe
27
27
1501 - 1531
George
Bothe
30
30
Elizabeth
Trafford
1485
Elizabeth
Boteler
1661 - 1698
John
Hackley
37
37
1665 - 1756
Elizabeth
Lambert
91
91
1175 - 1248
Warine
de
Vernon
73
73
# Note:
Warine, succeeded his grandfather as Baron of Shipbrooke; married Auda, daughter and coheir of William Malbank, Baron of Wich-Malbank (later Nantwich), Co Palatine of Chester (holder of a similar dignity to that of the Barons of Shipbrooke), and had [Warine], with a younger son Ralph. [Burke's Peerage]
# Note:
# Note: Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
# Note: Page: 2884
1177
Auda
de
Malbank
1221 - 1270
Ralph
de
Vernon
49
49
Rector of Hanwell, wrested barony from his nieces, becoming de jure Baron of Shipbrook (magnate, not member of peerage).
---On Raph's elder brother, Warine:
# Note:
Warine, Baron of Shipbrook; married Margaret, daughter of Ralph de Andeville and widow of Hugh de Altaribus, and had, with a son (Warine, dsp), three daughters (who, after a prolonged litigation with their maternal [I say paternal, since Burke's has already named Ralph a younger brother of Warine] uncle Ralph were obliged to give up to him half of the patrimony).
Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: 2884
1212
Alice
de
Vernon
1210
Warine
de
Vernon
1082
Warine
de
Bussel
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 789
Title: Gentlemen of Courage~Forward, The Line of Myles Standish within a History of England
Author: Lawrence Hill
Publication: Magnolia Publishing Company, Alderley Edge, Cheshire, First published1987
Page: Page 222.
Ameira
1108
Warin
Bussel
1105
Maud
de
Bussel
1020
Roger
de
Mortimer
1120
Reginald
Warren
1081 - 1130
Isabel
De
Crepi
49
49
Note:
[HughAncestors.ftw]
3rd daughter of Hugh the Great.
Countess Of Leicester, England.
---
# Note:
Isabel (or Elizabeth), widow of Robert (DE BEAUMONT), COUNT OF MEULAN and 1st EARL OF LEICESTER (died 5 June 1118), daughter of Hugh DE CRÉPI (styled "the Great"), COUNT OF VERMANDOIS (younger son of HENRY I, KING OF FRANCE), by Adelaide, daughter and heir of Herbert, COUNT OF VERMANDOIS and VALOIS. Isabel survived him and with the consent of her son the 3rd Earl gave the church of Dorking to Lewes priory. She died probably before July 1147. [Complete Peerage XII/1:495-6
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 2944
Text: Roger de Beaumont m. Gundred dau of William de Warenne and Elizabeth/Isabel, widow of Roger's uncle (Robert de Beaumont).
Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 53-24
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 88
Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: XII/1:496
1104 - 1178
Ada
De
Warenne
74
74
Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on
Page: United Kingdom-Ancestry of the British Royal House
Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: XII/1:496 (g)
Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 89-25
1110 - 1147
William
de
Warenne
37
37
# Note:
WILLIAM (DE WARENNE) III, EARL OF SURREY, 1st son and heir, was born probably in 1119. In June 1137 he was one of the nobles who deserted Stephen's army in Normandy. The King pursued them to Pontaudemer, where he held William de Warenne junior and other youths and did his best to pacify them; but did not dare to make them fight. He was with his half-brother Waleran, Count of Meulan, at Rouen on 18 Dec. 113 8, and at Oxford in 1139 or early in 1140. On 2 February 1140/1 he was in Stephen's army at the battle of Lincoln, and with Waleran fled before the enemy's opening charge. However, the brothers soon rallied to the Queen and were with her in London about June 1141. After the King's release on 1 November he witnessed royal charters at Canterbury at Christmas 1141 and at Ipswich early in 1142. On Palm Sunday, 24 March 1145/6, he took the cross, and in June 1147 he set off on crusade. He was a benefactor to the priories of Lewes, Castle Acre, Nosteil and Thetford, the Templars and St. Mary's Abbey, York. He married Ela or Ala, daughter of William TALVAS, COUNT OF PONTHIEU (son of Robert DE BELLÊME, 3rd EARL OF SHREWSBURY), by Ela, widow of Bertrand, COUNT OF TOULOUSE, and daughter of Eudes BOREL, DUKE OF BURGUNDY. He died s.p.m. 19 January 1147/8, being slain when the rearguard of the French King's army was cut to pieces in the defiles of Laodicea (i). His widow married, probably in or before 1152, Patrick (DE SALISBURY), 1st EARL OF WILTSHIRE or SALISBURY (died 1168). She is said to have died 4 October 1174. [Complete Peerage XII/1:496-7, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
# Note:
(i) He left an only daughter and heir Isabel. He was probably the first to assume the checkered shield of gold and azure, differenced by the change of colour from the checkered shield borne by his half-brother Waleran, Count of Meulan.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------
# Note:
William de Warrenne (Earl of Warrenne), 3rd Earl of Surrey, zealously espoused the cause of King Stephen and had a chief command in the army of that monarch in the battle fought at Lincoln between him and the adherents of the Empress Maud. His lordship m. Adela, dau. of William Talvace, son of Robert de Belesmé, Earl of Shrewsbury, and had by her (who m. 2ndly, Patrick de Evreux, Earl of Salisbury) had an only dau. and heir, Isabel. In 1147, the Earl of Warrenne and Surrey assumed the cross and accompanoied Lewis, King of France, to the Holy Land against the Saracens. From this unfortunate enterprise the earl never returned, but whether he fell in battle or died in captivity has not been ascertained. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 569, Warren, Earls of Surrey]
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 112
Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 108-26
Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: XII/1:496-7
1075 - 1115
Reynold
de
Warenne
40
40
1084
Edith
de
Warenne
# Note:
Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 158-2
Text: no date, 2nd husband
1137
Reynold
de
Lucy
1287
Joan
de
Molyneux
1263 - 1298
William
Molyneux
35
35
1267 - 1298
Isabella
Scarebrick
31
31
1242 - 1320
Richard
Molyneux
78
78
1232 - 1336
Emma
Donne
104
104
Alice
de
Molyneux
Agnes
Molyneux
D. 1289
William
Molyneux
Margaret
Thornton
D. 1247
Adam
Molyneux
The son of Richard. He was born in Little Crosby about 1185. He died in October 1246. In 1228 he had a commission for the perambulation of the forests of Lancaster county, and paid 40 marks to have 'seizin' of the inheritance from his father. This is the period when the title of Forester of Lancashire was still the hereditary right of the Gernet's. He married Lettice de Brenley (Brinley).
Letitia
de
Brinley
1212
Roger
de
Molyneux
D. 1211
Richard
Molyneux
The son of Robert. Of Sefton, Little Crosby and Speke. He married first Edith de Boteler in 1184. Edith was the sister of Alinerice (or Emery) de Botiller of Warrington. They had two sons: Adam and Robert. Richard later married Emma Davis, and they had six children: William, Thomas, Peter, John, Agnes, and Alice. Alice married her cousin Robert, son of Simon.
1163
Edith
Botiller
Robert
Molyneux
1135
Robert
Molyneux
The son of Adam and Annora. He was born in about 1135. Of Little Crosby. He married Beatrix (Beatrice) de Villers in about 1153. She was born in about 1138 in Little Crosby. She was the daughter and heiress of Sir Robert de Villiers, the son of Richard de Villiers, a crusader under Edward I, of Little. He became the Lord of Little Crosby. Beatrix had been ambitious to be a queen and was in love with King John. She was loath to leave him, but was given by the King in marriage in 1158 to Robert, one of his Barons. She bitterly cursed the House of Molyneux and all that bore the name, calling down maledictions of misery, blasting their loves with tragedy.
Descending from the issue of this marriage were the Earls of Sefton, Ireland, Teversall, and Nottinghamshire.
Beatrix was born about 1138.
Beatrice
de
Villiers
1107
Adam
Molyneux
Annora
le
Garnett
Benedict
de
Gernet
Lord of Speke. He may be the son of Ralph and brother to Vivian. Born in 1080 in Speke, which is near present-day Liverpool. His daughter was his sole heir.
Arms: Gules, a lion rampant, argent, crowned or, a bordure of the last. These arms indicate an early relationship to the Mowbray family, whose arms these are. Perhaps the Gernet's were part of this family pre-conquest?
Ralph
de
Gernet
Made a grant in 1094 to the abbey of St Martin de Sees in Normandy, of the church of St Mary, then newly erected in Lancaster by him.
Vivian
de
Gernet
Vivian
de
Molyneux
Sywarde
Adam
de
Gernet
Brian
Gernet
William
de
Molyneux
Robert
de
Molyneux
Of Moulon, France. The family came from Molineaux-sur-Seine.
Robert
de
Villiers
The son of Richard de Villiers, a crusader under Edward I, of Little Crosby?
Maria
FitzSimon
Alan
de
Villier
Pagan
de
Villiers
Ralph
FitzSimon
1192
Allen
de
Thornton
Alicia
Bickerstaff
1162 - 1244
Randle
de
Thornton
82
82
This Randle de Torhaunt must have been Randle le Roter, Lord of Thornton, who became possessed of the Manor of Thornton and is stated by Collins to have been a son of David le Clerk, Secretary to Randle Blundeville, Earl of Chester. Randle assumed the name of le Roter, and also of Thornton from his place of residence, and is sometimes designated by both.
Randle Thornton died before the 28th of Henry III, having married Amicia, daughter of Richard Kingsley and his wife Joan, daughter and co-heiress of Alexander Sylvester, Lord of Stourton and Forester of Wirral.
---
I had him as son of Peter de Thronton, so in the light of that and the above, have made him son of Peter, son of David le Clerc.
1178
Amicia
de
Kingsley
Margery
de
Thornton
Randolph
Roter de
Thornton
1225
Alice
de
Thornton
Cicely
Roter de
Thornton
1147
Peter
de
Malpas
Agnes
Thornton
1185 - 1252
David
de
Malpas
67
67
David le Clerc de Malpas, JP (Cheshire); Sheriff of Cheshire 1252; held three knight's fees in Cheshire, his 2nd son [Philip]. [Burke's Peerage]
---
David de Malpas, called David le Clerk, was Justice of Chester 34th Henry II, 1188. Three different references assign to each a different wife, but most likely he married Catherine, daughter of Owen Vaughan, Lord of Melior. He may have been married three times. He had William, eldest son, who died without legitimate issue, and left his brother Philip Gogh, surnamed de Egerton, as his legal heir.
Catherine
Vaughan
Owen
Vaughan
Lord of Melior
Beatrice
de
Malpas
Philip
Goch de
Egerton
David
Golborne
1115
William
Belward
William lived in the time of King Stephen, 1135-1154, and married Beatrix, daughter of Hugh de Bohun, alias Kyveliock, 5th Earl of Chester, and co-heir to her brother Randle, Earl of Chester. Arms: Gules three pheons argent, impaling three
garbs or. (Last are arms of Randle. Earl of Chester.)
1129
William
le
Belward
1138
Mabilia
FitzHugh
1072 - 1120
Robert
FitzHugh
48
48
Robert, the natural son of Hugh Lupus, 1st Earl of Chester, died without male issue, and it is agreed by all parties and the best authorities that he had two daughters: Letitia, who was the wife of Richard Patric, whose descendant carried one moiety of Malpus on down to Hugh Sutton. Mabilia,the other co-heiress, was wife of William Belward. From this period to the commencement of the inquisitions, the descent of the Malpus share of the Barony, is preserved by deeds and by pleas relative to the contest between the rightful heirs.
1135 - 1224
Richard
de
Kingsley
89
89
1140 - 1220
Joan
de
Sylvester
80
80
1184
Johanna
de
Kingsley
1105
Ranulph
de
Kingsley
1110
Leuca
1080
Ranulph
de
Kingsley
1110
Alexander
de
Stourton
Some say he was son, not son in law of Ranulph Sylvester.
Amabilla
de
Silvester
Agnes
de
Stourton
Guy
de
Storeton
1145
Ranulph
FitzAlan de
Silvester
1120
Allan
de
Silvester
Steward to Ranulph third Earl of Chester, who gave him the manor of Storuton, with the bailliewick of Wirral, and the government of the forest.
His hunting horn (given by Ranulph) is preserved at Hooton by the Stanley family. (History of the House of Stanly, 1737, John Seacombe)
1265 - 1318
William
de
Dacre
53
53
1240 - 1286
Randolph
de
Dacre
46
46
1240
Joanna
de Lucy
de Multon
1220
Thomas
de
Dacre
1220
Marley
de
Morley
1200
Humphrey
de
Dacre
1200
Harrington
1175
Thomas
de
Dacre
1175
Mowbray
1150
William
de
Dacre
1150
de
Grey
1204
Alan
de
Multon
1204 - 1288
Alice
de
Lucy
84
84
1225
Thomas
of
Copeland
1222
John
de
Lucy
1175 - 1240
Thomas
de
Multon
65
65
1180 - 1204
Sarah
de
Flete
24
24
1199
Margaret
de
Multon
1200 - 1200
Lambert
de
Multon
1150 - 1201
Thomas
de
Multon
51
51
1152
Eleanor
de
Boston
1125 - 1169
Lambert
de
Multon
44
44
1143
Hawise
de
Briwere
1120
Robert
de
Briwere
1100
Thomas
de
Multon
1070 - 1100
Brictive
de
Multon
30
30
1175
Hawise
de
Multon
1155
Richard
de
Flete
1160
Juliana
1127
Josce
de
Flete
1104
de
Flete
1075
Arnaud
de
Flotte
1075
Adelais
de
Comps
1050 - 1120
Henri
de la
Flotte
70
70
1170 - 1213
Richard
de
Lucy
43
43
1172 - 1230
Ada
de
Morville
58
58
1200 - 1276
Amabel
de
Lucy
76
76
1098
John
le
Belward
1110
Robert
FitzHugh
1134
Robert
FitzHugh
1117
Gundred
de
Warenne
1180
Ciceley
de
Kingsley
1168
Richard
de
Kingsley
1170
Ralph
de
Kingsley
1172
Emma
de
Kingsley
1174
Avice
de
Kingsley
1176
James
de
Kingsley
1210
Richard
de
Lucy
1212
John
de
Lucy
1184
Eleanor
de
Multon
1177
Margaret
de
Multon
1456 - 1512
Margaret
Babington
56
56
1432 - 1503
John
FitzHerbert
71
71
1400 - 1472
Nicholas
FitzHerbert
72
72
1410
Alice
Booth
1434
Robert
FitzHerbert
1436
Johanna
FitzHerbert
1438
Isabella
FitzHerbert
1440
Roger
FitzHerbert
1442
William
FitzHerbert
1446
Anne
FitzHerbert
1444
Douce
FitzHerbert
1370
Henry
FitzHerbert
1375
Downes
1343
William
FitzHerbert
1352
Alice
de
Longford
1380
Nicholas
FitzHerbert
1316
William
FitzHerbert
1325
Jane
Kniveton
1271 - >1350
John
FitzHerbert
79
79
Name Suffix: Lord Of Norbury
Sir John FitzHerbert, of Norbury; living 1350; married Margaret, daughter of Sir Walter de Montgomery, of Marston Montgomery and Cubley, Derbys. [Burke's Peerage]
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:3152034&id=I088604
1286
Margaret
de
Montgomery
1254 - 1303
William
de
Montgomery
49
49
WILLIAM DE MONTGOMERY in 1284 was holding one fee and his son Ralph 2/3 fee in Ecton [VCH Northants, v. 4 p.123 cit ing Feudal Aids,iv, 14] of Avelina de Forz, Countess of Devon. The inquisition postmortem for Edmund the King's brother] 26 Edw I 1297, stated that in Derbyshire, William was holding 7 knights' fees in Sudbury, Cubley, Marston, Aston, Snelston, Somersal, Eyton, Seggeshale, Orleston and the manor of Ecton, co Northampton, with the advow sons of the churches of Sudbury, Cubley and Ecton. [CIPM v.3 ; no.423 ].Montgomery tenure subsequently transferred to Lancastrian overlordship. Summoned to serve against the Scots 7 Jul y 1297, from Staffordshire 25 May 1298 and again from Northants. Notts. and Derbys. 24 June 1300. In August 1300 he was involved in a suit against Urien St. Pierre. [C.Moor, Kni ghts of Edward I, v.III p.190]. This may have been over the manor of Eaton Dovedale, Derbyshire which descended to th e Cokeseys and which was held of Nicholas Montgomery 1407 [ CIPM v.XIX, no.175]. In 1301 William de Montgomery was named amongst those tenants holding lands in Staffordshire worth 40 pounds p.a. or more. [VCH Staffordshire v.1 p.230]. I n 1303 he was given a letter of protection for going to Scotland on the king's service and a writ to select 500 footmen from Derbyshire and conduct them to Scotland. Died in 1303. Married to Alice, probably the sameAlice de Monte Gomeri widow of Gawain le Botiler of Wem (d.s.p.1289aged 19-20 ), who in 1334 was holding a third part of Hynstoke manor, Shropshire in dower. [CIPM v.VII ; no. 593]. Alice presented to Cubley church in 1332. [Cox. Churches of Derbyshire v.3 p.92-4]. In1334, as "Alice formerly wife of William de Montgomery of Cubley" she sued Edmund Cheigny, husband of Joan de Grendon, for an illegal distress. [Pedigrees f rom the Plea Rolls, The Genealogist, v. 9 p.9].She was not mother of William's son and heir, Walter.
1260
Alice
1284
Ralph
de
Montgomery
1290
Adam
de
Montgomery
1229
Walter
de
Montgomery
1256
Philip
de
Montgomery
1208 - 1303
William
de
Montgomery
95
95
Sources:
1. Title: Rosie Bevan - soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com
Repository:
Name: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com
Page: 25 Nov 2002
Text: 6.SIR WILLIAM DE MONTGOMERY was holding two fees in Ecton in 1242 according
to Book of Fees, 934 [VCH Northants v.4 p.123].
In 1249 an inquiry revealed that he had free warren in Cubley, Marchington
and Sudbury [Calendarium Inquisitionem Post Mortem v.1 p. 8]. He was
Commissioner of the Peace in Derbyshire and in 1252 William and William his
son were chosen as knights to participate in a great assize. On 29 Nov 1254
he was granted a weekly market and fair in Cubley on Wednesday. [Calendarium
Rotulorum Chartarum p.84]. From a charter of a grant of alms to Tutbury
priory dated 19 March 1252, it appears that his wife was called Matilda. [A
Saltman, The Cartulary of Tutbury Priory, (HMSO, 1962) no.331] A licence for
a market was regranted for a Thursday to William de Montgomery on 7 Apr
1255. In 1256 named as William fil William he paid 10 L for having a charter
the grant being renewed by the seal of England [CPR, 1247-58, p. 385].
Mentioned in 1264 letter of protection granted for William de Montgomery
"the elder" [CPR,1247-58 p.355].
Issue of William:
- William. See below
1210
Matilda
1184 - 1249
William
de
Montgomery
65
65
1156 - 1205
William
de
Montgomery
49
49
1180
Walter
de
Montgomery
1132 - 1177
Walter
de
Montgomery
45
45
1296
Nicholas
Kniveton
1330
Nicholas
Kinveton
1334
Alice
le
Boteler
1325
Nicholas
de
Longford
1354
Nicholas
de
Longford
1265
John
de
Longford
1268
Joan
Byron
1240
Oliver
de
Longford
1244
Agnes
de
Horbury
1218 - 1259
Ralph
de
Horbury
41
41
1245 - 1308
John
Byron
63
63
1250
Alice
1266
Robert
Byron
1274
Richard
Byron
Served in Parliament in 1322. Lord of Cadenay & Clayton
1220 - <1274
Robert
Byron
54
54
Robert de Byron, the eldest son, was lord of the manor of Clayton, Robert de Heston releasing to him and his heirs all his right in the said manor, and in all his lands within these bounds; viz. from Hardene, ascending by the --------- the little brook next Drulsden, as far as the ditches, and from them to the little rill next to the land of Sinderland, so descending by the said rivulet as far as the demesne lands of Hardene; in consideration whereof, the said Robert gave him three marks and a half of silver: and, by another deed, he remises to Sir Richard, his brother (aforesaid) and to his heirs, all his right and title in Clayton, Failesworth, and Drylesden, in the country of Lancaster; also by another deed, all his right in the whole town of Drylesden.
King Richard I. in the first year of his reign, confirmed to the prior and monks of Royston, in Cambridgeshire (inter alia), the grant of this Robert de Byron to that convent, of two acres and a half of land in Burley.
This Robert was also a witness to a grant, made by Theobald Walter, of Pyling-Hay, in Lancashire, to the monks of Cockersand, for the souls of King Henry II. and Richard I.
Maud his wife, was living in the 2d year of the reign of Edward I. and had issue by him two sons, William and John. [Collins Peerage VII:92]
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dadslegacy&id=I7274
1248
Robert
Byron
1182 - <1212
Robert
de
Byron
30
30
Robert de Byron, the eldest, is mentioned in a plea between him and the prior of Lenton, concerning two carrucates of land in Cotegrave, which by a fine (Ped. Fin. A. 1 R. I. Jo. in Scac.) levied at Westminster, in Michaelmas term, in the first year of the reign of King John, was settled on the said Robert and his heirs; who, in consideration thereof, gave to the said priory three bovates of land in Cotegrave, with his moiety of the plowed land called Gelderhrnor; and obliged himself to defend from scutage the whole land of the said priory in Cotegrave, of his fee. He had lands given to him and Cecilia his wife, by Aubert Grelli, in Barnby, to hold by the fourth part of a knight's fee; and had issue by the said Cecilia, daughter and heir of Richard Clayton (MS. St. George præd.), of Clayton, Lancashire. [Collins Peerage VII:91]
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dadslegacy&id=I7277
1195
Cecelia
de
Clayton
~1151
Richard
de
Clayton
Sources:
Title: Collins' Peerage of England, Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical, Greatly Augmented, etc.; Sir Egerton Brydges {1812}
Page: VII:91
Title: The Judges of England with Sketches of Their Lives, etc.; Edward Foss {1848-1864}
Page: III:69
Title: Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire, 2nd ed; Robert Thoroton {1790-1797}
Page: II:284
~1124 - 1194
Roger
de
Byron
70
70
Which Sir Roger de Buron (who is by some writers deemed his brother), gave certain lands to the church of Swinsted, and the monks there, as appears by a confirmation thereof by Hen. II. in whose reign he paid 10l. scutage for ten knights fees in Nottingham and Derby shires. (Rot. Rip. A. 6. 6 R. I.) Also, in the sixth year of Richard I. on the aid of 20 s. for each knight's fee, for that King's redemption, he answered 10l. for ten knights fees in the beforementioned counties. Likewise, in the first year of King John, he answered for ten knights fees towards the scutage of Normandy, then assessed at two marks for each knight's fee. He married Nichola (Thoroton's Nott. p. 260), dauther of Roeland de Verdon, who survived him, and had for her second husband Anketin de Brkesard; but being married without the King's consent, her lands were seized, and for some of them she was fined in the second year of the reign of King John. By the said Roger de Buron she had issue two sons. [Complete Peerage VII:91]
________________________________________
Roger de Burun, son of Hugh de Burun d. 1155, and probably grandson of Ralph de Burun, lord of Horsley, Derbyshire. At his death in 1194 his barony was taken over by the king and subsequently given to Peter III de Sandiacre, although Roger left a son Robert. [Domesday Descendants p363]
Sources:
Title: Collins' Peerage of England, Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical, Greatly Augmented, etc.; Sir Egerton Brydges {1812}
Page: VII:90-91
Title: Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire, 2nd ed; Robert Thoroton {1790-1797}
Page: II:284
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dadslegacy&id=I7280&style=TABLE
~1159
Nichola
de
Verdun
~1099 - <1155
Hugh
de
Byron
56
56
To this Ralph succeeded Hugh de Buron, lord of the castle of Horestan, who, in the 9th year of King Stephen, together with Hugh, his son and heir, gave to the monastery of Lenton, the church of Oscinton, about which there was a dispute (Placita apud Westm. A. 7 R. I. Rot. II.), in the 7th of Richard I. with the prior of the hospital of St John of Jerusalem; when the prior of the hospital of St John of Jerusalem; when the prior of Lenton produced the grant of the said Hugh, and the prior of the hospital of St John, that of Roger de Buron, by which he gave to that house the town of Oscinton, with the appurtenances; whereupon no judgment was given by the court, because the prior of Lenton's attorney knew not whether he should put his cause to an issue, before he had his client's direction.
This Hugh de Buron gave likewise in the said reign, by his charter (wherein he is styled lord of Horstone-castle), the church of Horsley (Thoroton's Nott. p. 260.) to the then prior of Lenton, and his successors; which was confirmed by the Bishop of Coventry and Litchfield, and ratified by the Pope. [Collins Peerage VII:90]
______________________________________
Hugo de Burun, successor by c 1135/40 of Ralph de Buron, a Domesday tenant-in-chief in Nottinghamshire. Hugh was dead by 1155, when his son Roger (d. 1194) owed 4 marks relief. He was probably also father of Adelina, wife of Robert de somerville; cf. Foulds, Thurgarton Cart. p. 685. [Domesday Descendants p362]
Sources:
Title: Collins' Peerage of England, Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical, Greatly Augmented, etc.; Sir Egerton Brydges {1812}
Page: VII:90
Title: Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire, 2nd ed; Robert Thoroton {1790-1797}
Page: II:284
Title: Domesday Descendants, A Prosopography of People Occuring in English Documents 1066-1166; K B S Keats-Rohan {2002}
Page: 362
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dadslegacy&id=I7285&style=TABLE
~1136
Ruellan
de
Verdun
Ruellan de Verdun, held one fee de novo of Bertram II de Verdun, his kinsman. He was perhaps a brother of Bertram and father of the Rualon de Verdun 'iuniore' who was named in a charter of Henry de Clinton for Kenilworth abbey. In the cartulary of Avranches cathedral there is a charter by Beatrix daughter of Ruellan de Verdun, 'domina de Mestruil', widow of Richard Malherbe and richard Peilevilain, granting two fields at Saint-Martin-des -Champs. [Domesday Descendants p766]
Sources:
Title: Collins' Peerage of England, Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical, Greatly Augmented, etc.; Sir Egerton Brydges {1812}
Page: VII:91
Title: Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire, 2nd ed; Robert Thoroton {1790-1797}
Page: II:284
Title: Domesday Descendants, A Prosopography of People Occuring in English Documents 1066-1166; K B S Keats-Rohan {2002}
Page: 766
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dadslegacy&id=I7282&style=TABLE
1386
Henry
Booth
1390
Isabella
Findern
1416
Catherine
Booth
1356 - 1422
John
Booth
66
66
1365
Joan
de
Trafford
1382
Margaret
Booth
1384
Robert
Booth
1388
Ralph
Booth
1390
John
Booth
1392
William
Booth
1394
Thomas
Booth
1396
Matthew
Booth
1398
Johanna
Booth
1400
Joan
Booth
1402
Richard
Booth
1404
Catherine
Booth
1406
Roger
Booth
1409
Lucy
Booth
1412
Alice
Booth
1330 - 1373
Thomas
Booth
43
43
1339
Elena
de
Workesley
1360
Margaret
Booth
1363
Elena
Booth
1370
Thomas
Booth
1380
William
Booth
1383
Anne
Booth
1300
John
Booth
The family was really a branch of the family of Booth of Boothstown, Worsley, the first Booth of Barton being John del Booth, who married Loretta, who was daughter and sole heiress of Agnes de Barton.
John del Booth, by marrying Loretta de Notten, became Lord of the Manor of Barton, the family becoming known as the Booths of Barton.
1305
Loretta
de
Notton
1270
Thomas
Booth
1240
William
Booth
1243
Sebilla
Brereton
1210
Adam
de
Booth